All Ten Seasons of 24 RANKED!
24 is my favorite show of all time! I loved almost every season of the show, but there were definitely some I enjoyed more than others. This ranking will be including the original eight days, Live Another Day, and Legacy. Redemption will be included as part of Season 7, as ranking a film against whole seasons of television simply isn't fair, and it is practically just a long episode of Season 7. Now, without further ado, The Reel Ranker presents... All Ten Seasons of 24 RANKED!
10: Day 4 - C Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 49%
Release Date: 2005
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 95%
Metacritic: 79
I know this season is beloved by many, but I simply was never able to get into it. There were some standout moments, but just as many frustrating moments. The plot follows Jack Bauer, who was fired from CTU due to his heroin addiction but now works for Secretary of Defense James Heller (and dates his daughter, Audrey Raines). First, I'll start with the standout moments. First positive: James Heller and Audrey Raines are fantastic characters. Second positive: the drama between Jack, Paul, and Audrey was interesting. Third positive: Michelle and Tony make up after being separated between the events of Day 3 and 4 (to be fair, I thought that was a stupid separation in the first place, so this is more of a mixed bag). Fourth positive: Jack faking his death at the end was a very cool scene. This season sets up a lot of cool things for future seasons but it is also the only season I actively dislike—I'd skip this season if I ever went on another 24 binge. Why is this?
First of all, the absence of major characters for the first half of the season just to have them quickly replace the new characters in the second half was odd and jarring. Why did characters like Erin Driscoll, Maya Driscoll, and Sarah Gavin exist when they got replaced almost just as soon as they were introduced? Super weird. Another major flaw was that there was only one major villain this season, unlike the other seasons which had a multitude of interesting villains. Now, if Habib Marwan was a fantastic, conniving villain with an impeccable screen presence? I'd be down for him being the only villain. Yet I found Habib Marwan to be not even half as interesting as the majority of minor villains of the show. I found Ahmed Amar, the henchmen from the start of Day 6 to be infinitely more interesting than Marwan. By the end of Day 4, I almost heard Marwan like it was a placeholder word because they said it so many times. I couldn't be more happy when the season ended so we could finally get a new villain. Not saying the actor did badly, but come on, at least make the guy interesting. What really made me mad was that the only good villain of the season, Behrooz Araz, was Behroozed and never showed up again. Behrooz was more interesting in the first 30 seconds he was on screen than the entirety of what Marwan did throughout this season's runtime. But I digress.
My biggest issue with this season is the utter lack of the interesting season-wide White House drama, which, quite frankly, is my favorite part of this show in the majority of seasons. Here, it is just President Keeler's plane crashing and, yet again, the stupid 25th Amendment comes back, making Charles Logan the president. I did like that David Palmer came in as an advisor to Logan, but honestly, this season's political drama was awful. This season felt more like an action movie, with so much more shooting and action instead of what makes this show truly unique. I can see why that would be good for some, but it made this season really uninteresting for me. Not a good sign when 24: Legacy literally has more interesting political drama than this season.
Ultimately, I'm sure this is a very controversial placement of this season (if Rotten Tomatoes is anything to go off of), but with an uninteresting villain, uninteresting political drama, a weird CTU character cast, and the overabundance of what feels like mindless action scenes, this was my least favorite season of 24. It isn't a bad season, but it is absolutely not my type of season. If you love it? I'm happy for you, and wish I felt the same way.
9: Day 10 (Legacy) - B Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 53%
Release Date: 2017
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 60%
Metacritic: 49
I'm just as surprised as you are that I actually admitted to the Internet that I prefer Legacy to one of the show's most critically-acclaimed seasons. Whereas I actively dislike many things about Season 4, I really don't dislike anything here—it was a fun, new take on 24. But I also didn't like that many things here: it was one of the most mediocre seasons of TV that I've ever watched. My favorite parts of this show include the dynamic between the Carter brothers and Eric's wife, Tony Almeida's inclusion, the high school subplot, and everything involving Rebecca Ingram's emotional sacrifice. This season has its moments. Not many of them, but it does have them. It may not live up to the legacy of 24 as its name would suggest, but it's still an okay enough season that gets the job done. I just wished it would've got renewed for another season as, with some refining, I have faith that subsequent seasons of this show could be awesome.
8: Day 1 - S Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 77%
Release Date: 2001
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 95%
Metacritic: 88
We have now reached the first season of 24 that I actually really like! While I have more issues with this season than Day 10, the good certainly outweighs the bad. As the first season of the show, it feels more grounded and small-scale, giving off a more indie vibe than later seasons did. The story of this season centers around Jack preventing an assassination attempt on presidential candidate, Senator David Palmer, and on saving his wife and daughter, who are kidnapped by the very same people led by one Ira Gaines. However, it is soon revealed that Gaines is simply a pawn to a much bigger plot—he's a simple mercenary for hire, employed by the Drazen family as means to an end. The Drazens hope to assassinate Palmer for his involvement in Operation Nightfall, a covert operation that led to the deaths of two members of the Drazen family. Later, Jack's former loved, Nina Meyers, is revealed to be the government mole aiding the Drazens—just for the money and adrenaline of it all, she claims. After Jack is able to thwart the terrorist threat, he returns to CTU, only to find that Nina had shot and killed his wife in one of the show's biggest plot twists. This season keeps it rather simple and straightforward, which is one of its biggest strengths!
Now to get into some of my favorite parts of the season. I loved the plot twists involving Nina Meyers and Kevin Caroll impersonating Alan York. I loved the shootout where Jack blinded a sniper with a piece of metal. I loved the final battle against the Drazens and the moment Jack receives the fake news of Kim's death. I love the first few episodes in general! But there are also some pretty distasteful parts of this season as well. Everything involving the Teri and Kim plotlines drag on forever. I almost hoped they would get shot and die instead of be saved so I could see more of Jack's story and David Palmer's shenanigans. The worst part of it all is the awful amnesia plot that makes no sense, has no bearing on the plot, and lasts for way too many episodes. Kim's Stockholm syndrome makes her feel like a desperate, overly-hormonal teenager with less than half a brain cell. Perhaps the most annoying part of the season is Alberta Green, who ticked me off more and more every time she used her worthless and offensively disgusting voice box to say any of her barf-inducing, unsavory BS. In the end, this is a weaker 24 season, but a still a great TV season nonetheless.
7: Day 3 - S+ Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 84%
Release Date: 2003
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 93%
Metacritic: 72
The third season of 24 has some magnificent moments! The first half of the season focuses on a covert mission that is meant to secretly release a high-value prisoner as part of a deal necessary to acquire the dangerous Cordilla virus to keep it out of terrorist hands. The second act then focuses on taking down Stephen Saunders, a radicalized agent attempting to gain leverage over David Palmer and manipulate foreign policy in his favor. In the meantime, Jack is suffering from a heroin addiction gained from going undercover with the Salazars and President Palmer faces PR backlash due to his new girlfriend. Two romantic relationships are prevalent in this season: the first being Tony and Michelle, and the second being now-CTU-analyst Kim Bauer and Jack's new partner, Chase Edmunds. The former are at their absolute best in this season (I mean, now that they are married, that would make sense), whereas the latter was just an awful relationship to begin with.
Standout moments of this season include Michelle's stay at the infected hotel where Gael honorably dies as a pseudo-sacrifice; David Palmer and Wayne Palmer's tension and David's ultimate resignation due to Wayne's romantic affair with candidate supporter Alan Miliken's wife; Sherry Palmer and Julia Miliken's subplot, where the latter kills the former in a shocking murder-suicide; Jack's disapproval and protectiveness of Kim and Chase's relationship until he finally realizes it's not his choice to make; the plot twist revealing the whole first act was a covert mission, not a real terrorist attack; Nina Meyers's death by the hand of Jack to avenge his wife; the whole deal with the Salazars; Chloe O'Brian's introduction; Ryan Chapelle finally getting killed like he deserved to in the first place; and Tony making a difficult decision to save Michelle, knowing how bad the consequences may be. In the end, this is a practically perfect season of 24, but with a show as good as this, there are still a plethora of seasons I like better.
6: Day 6 - S+ Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 85%
Release Date: 2007
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 74%
Metacritic: 79
While Day 6 is still rather low on this list, I really love it, and I couldn't disagree more with the unrelenting barrage of hate directed toward it by the fanbase. It is not the obvious worst season of the show, at least in my eyes. While the second half is undeniably slow-paced, that doesn't mean its bad—I'd much rather watch the slow-paced second act of Day 6 over Day 4's endless episodes of meaningless shootouts over a stupid nuclear football. But I digress.
Let's get the bad things about this season out of the way first. First of all, the entirety of the Sandra Palmer subplot was silly and meaningless. Second of all, Noah Daniels is super boring compared to Wayne, so I was annoyed he took over during the second half of the show. Third of all, bigger repercussions of the nuclear bomb that went off would make the show much more interesting! Nonetheless, I think people's endless complaints about this subject are way too overblown by the fanbase. It wasn't a full-scale nuclear blast, and Jack couldn't dwell on it, as there were four more nukes still out there! While the complaints are stupid, having a character like Kim be relatively near to the nuclear blast in a two-or-three episode subplot would have been nice to see, as the consequences would feel more real and threatening. Last of all, Ahmed Amar needs to learn some manners and not treat his "friends" like absolute bat-crap. So awful.
Now, let's get into the good—the overwhelming majority of what I have to say about this season! Firstly, Wayne is an awesome president I wish we got to see more of. I love his charisma and his change in demeanor since his immature actions in Season 3, and contrary to popular belief, I thought he seemed like a decent president. Don't really understand why everyone hates on him, especially since he's six times more competent than the last three presidents we have had in real life. Remember, he's literally fictional, so don't get your panties/knickers in a twist. Another thing I love is the character of Hamri Al-Assad... his death was far too early! I wanted to see more of his change of heart from terrorist to leading a union against terrorism. I loved the tackling of racism and the scenes in which we saw the cruelty of the Russians who were manipulating the Middle Eastern people into doing their dirty work, citing that it was "in their religion" and "for the greater good". It was very sad, but an interesting little plotline. There was Graem Bauer's interrogation and eventual death at the hands of Phillip Bauer, which was brutal and interesting to watch! I liked the Audrey Raines subplot and Cheng Zhi's return as a villain, as well as every single thing that comes out of the mouths of Chloe and Morris O'Brian—this is the season that features Morris most prominently, how can people hate it so much! I loved the Karen Hayes, Tom Lennox, and Bill Buchanan subplots and Nadia Yaseem's eventual leadership over CTU. Having Nadia Yaseem lead was a great juxtaposition to the evils the people of her country were committing, showing that (obviously) race has nothing to do with anything. The Fayed plotline at the beginning of the season was immaculate and the epic train sequence in which Jack kicks a suicide bomber off of a train is one of the most epic kills of Bauer's. The CTU break-in is one of the most tense and incredible scenes in the season and show! Ultimately, while this season isn't perfect and it definitely gets weaker as it goes, it is still a fantastic season of my favorite TV show!
5: Day 7 - S+ Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 88%
Release Date: 2009
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 76%
Metacritic: 72
Day 7 has a completely different vibe than the first six seasons. Jack no longer works with CTU, but with the FBI, as CTU was disbanded by the former president. Jack had to come out of hiding pre-season during Redemption, as to save many children, he had to accept the subpoena placed on him and return to the United States. During his trial, the FBI pulls him out, as they desperately need his help to take down the previously-believed-to-be-dead, now-terrorist Tony Almeida. Jack tracks Tony down and ruthlessly interrogates him, eventually learning that Tony is allied with Chloe and Bill Buchanan in an underground operation to expose government corruption and take out radicals Benjamin Juma and Colonel Iké Dubaku, who were introduced in Redemption. Dubaku kidnaps Sangalan president Ule Matobo as a bargaining chip for Madame President Allison Taylor to turn over the CIP device, which can control government infrastructure and prevent U.S. involvement in taking down Juma's regime in Sangala. Luckily, Jack and Tony run a covert operation, retrieving Matobo. They eventually take out Dubaku with the help of his girlfriend, Marika, and uses Dubaku's microchip to leak co-conspirators of Dubaku's to all American government agencies. Juma is fed up with Dubaku's "cowardice" and kills him before executing a frontal assault on the White House in one of the most epic scenes of the show. After taking out Juma, leaks reveal a bigger plot planned by independent defense contractor Starkwood, led by one Jonas Hodges. Jack takes down Starkwood, but as a result, Olivia Taylor and Tony go rogue. Tony plans to release a bioweapon against the government, as they failed to provide protection for his deceased wife, Michelle. Tony frames the bio-attack on an innocent Muslim man and reveals he is trying to lure Alan Wilson out into the open so he can kill him for his part in killing his wife and David Palmer. Tony is taken down by Jack and Wilson is apprehended in the final moments of the season. This season was absolute perfection, much in part due to introducing two of my favorite protagonists of the show: FBI Agent Renee Walker and Madame President Allison Taylor, as well as two of my favorite antagonists, Olivia Taylor and Colonel Iké Dubaku. The only problem with this season? It isn't as good as the next four. It's a masterpiece, but there are still four beyond-masterpieces to come.
4: Day 9 (Live Another Day) - The Reel Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 94%
Release Date: 2014
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 82%
Metacritic: 70
Following Day 8, the show's original finale, Day 9 takes place in London, where Jack Bauer is living in exile to avoid CIA detection and retribution from the Russia government after trying to assassinate President Yuri Suvarov during the events of the previous season. Jack starts the season secretly tracking antigovernmental group Open Cell, in which Chloe is now a part of due to the death of Morris and Prescott, as she blames the government for their deaths. However, as Jack is tracking this group, he hears of an imminent threat of an assassination attempt on now-President James Heller. The first act focuses on stopping this attempt, which is to be carried out by known terrorist, Margot Al-Harazi. The threat elevates when Al-Harazi fires missles on a military vehicle using a device she stole, which was manufactured by Adrian Cross, leader of Open Cell and (presumably) Chloe's current boyfriend. However, as no device like this had ever been used before, the murders of the people in the vehicle were blamed on United States Air Force First Lieutenant Christ Tanner instead. Jack breaks into the United States Embassy, retrieving Tanner's flight key in an attempt to prove him innocent, but the Marines trap him on the way out. However, CIA Agent Kate Morgan believes Bauer, pretending to apprehend him and then taking the lfight key to pass it on. Outside of Jack and Renee, Jack and Kate is definitely my favorite field ops duo of the show. If there's ever a Season 11, she better be part of it. After the flight key proves him innocent, Al-Harazi threatens to fire missiles on London from six U.S. drones if President Heller isn't handed over so she can kill him. However, Jack finds a way to fake Heller's death, which leads to him tracking down a lead and brutally throwing Al-Harazi out of a window. Good-ol' fashioned Jack Bauer for you. Afterward, it is revealed that the device manufactured by Adrian Cross was to be sold to Cheng Zhi, not Al-Harazi, and the show gets an epic final few seasons where Jack can finally kill Cheng Zhi for his crimes against humanity.
My favorite parts of this season were the hardcore Kate Morgan scenes; Simone Al-Harazi's subplot involving her mom and her husband, Naveed; the solemn scenes in which Audrey Boudreau and Jack interact; the absolutely iconic fake-out death of President James Heller, perhaps the best fake-out death I've ever seen; the plot twist that Cheng Zhi is back after he killed the entirety of Open Cell (save Chloe); the heartbreaking death of Audrey and President Heller's dementia making him forget he ever had a daughter; and the final scene in which Jack gives himself up to the Russians to prevent further conflict and save Chloe O'Brian, who the Russians abducted to use as a bargaining chip to take Jack into their custody. This is a brilliant, concise, and action-packed season with so much to love, but, apparently, perfect brilliance is only enough to get fourth place on a ranking like this. I mean, this is mostly in fourth because it has 12 perfect episodes instead of 24 perfect episodes but, you know, whatever.
3: Day 5 - The Reel Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 96%
Release Date: 2006
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 100%
Metacritic: 89
This may be one of the simplest and most streamlined seasons of 24, but there's a reason it is widely cited as the best the show has to offer. Within the first few minutes, Jack is out of hiding and taking on terrorists left-and-right due to the murders of his good friends Michelle Dessler and Former President David Palmer. This instantly makes the stakes of the season personal, which helps fuel the fire for this incredible season. The conflict of the season seems to start small, but eventually, it is revealed that President Charles Logan was complicit in the day's terrorist attacks. He and his terrorist associates hoped to release nerve gas on Russia in an attempt to invoke the military clauses of a treaty and secure American petroleum interests in Central Asia. The gas is released in many places, including CTU, which makes for one of the best and most haunting episodes of the series. Upon recovering evidence that can implicate Logan's complicity in the conflict, they give it to Secretary of Defense James Heller, but he betrays Jack and decides not to reveal it to the Attorney General, but to go straight to Logan and use it as a bargaining chip which, as anybody with a brain cell or two would realize, didn't work. The recording gets destroyed by an employee of Homeland Security, who made a deal with Logan to get a promotion if they did so. Jack finds a new plan, putting a listening device on First Lady Martha Logan, who coerces her husband to reveal the information. Chloe then sends this evidence to the Attorney General, who arrests Logan in one of the show's most epic moments. Ultimately, as the most concise, tense, and epic seasons of 24, it places in third place on my list.
2: Day 2 - The Reel Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 97%
Release Date: 2002
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 95%
Metacritic: 83
This is easily my favorite early-24 season for a variety of reasons. First of all, this season has the best subplots of the entire show! The Kate Warner subplot is very mysterious, full of twists, and ultimately ends up being super heartbreaking. The Kim subplot here is actually really interesting and, while it adds virtually nothing to the plot, it still elevated the season to make it more entertaining and layered, as well as utilize the whole multi-screen, real-time premise to its best effect. The nuclear crisis present in this season is arguably the most frightening scenario of the show (though not nearly the most threatening). Why is this? Coming off of the small-scale, personal vendetta plot of the first season, this conflict elevated the stakes to an entirely new level that the show would struggle to replicate in many of its future seasons. The episode in which Jack decides to sacrifice his life to fly the nuclear bomb to the Mojave Desert on a suicide mission is, in my opinion, the best episode of the entire show. This moment was so emotionally powerful, and the moment George Mason reveals that he was on the plane the whole time was phenomenal. George Mason taking over and letting Jack save himself was amazing and a perfect end to Mason's character arc. This season also has my favorite final act of the series, because, as I mentioned in my blurb on Season 4, my favorite part of this show is the over-the-top, intense political drama. And that's exactly the type of crap that goes down in the second act! This act literally centers around stopping World War III from starting by proving the forgery of evidence planted by a conspiracy (led by Peter Kingsley) looking to capitalize on the corporate gains that would result from the instability of war. With Cabinet betrayals, David Palmer in his prime, in-White-House murders, and the evocation of the Twenty-Fifth Amendment, the absurdity of it all is phenomenal. With a first act full of awesome subplots and an incredible climax and a second act of ingenious, over-the-top political drama, this is one of the best seasons of 24.
1: Day 8 - The Reel Tier
The Reel Ranker Score: 98%
Release Date: 2010
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 75%
Metacritic: 67
I know this is controversial, but this is my favorite season of 24. While it stands as the least critically-acclaimed season outside of Legacy and is one of the least-liked seasons by fans, it simply had resonated with me the most of any of the ten seasons.
I think two of my boys over on Rotten Tomatoes said it perfectly. The first says: "This is the best season of 24, the absolute bloodiest as Bauer is out to kill any and everyone involved in murdering Renee, including boat loads of politicians. Sutherland is so gangsta in that black Jason mask mowing down enemies. Absolutely thrilling conclusion to the original 8 seasons!" And the second says: "For those happy to watch a greatest-hits rather than a game-changer, there's lots to enjoy."
Those two comments sum up the most basic opinion I have of this season. This season is the most jack-of-all-trades, master-of-none season for me. It takes elements I loved about every previous season and blended them into a "greatest-hits" amalgamation that stands as my favorite season of my favorite show. It didn't tread any new ground or anything, but it simply was fantastic. When I went back to read the plot synopsis of each of these seasons to remember what exactly happened, this really does seem like the most simple and bland season of them all. However, what I love about this season can't be done justice by simple words on a Wikipedia page. I absolutely adore the political drama and tension, with Madame President Allison Taylor's peace treaty being my favorite driving force behind a season. When it really comes down to it, this season focuses less on the terrorist threat than most other seasons, but doubles down on the politics of the situation and shows us all the behind-the-scenes information on why Yuri Suvarov might want to see IRK President Omar Hassan dead and unable to sign this treaty.
While I do agree this season didn't tread new ground, it did have a shift in perspective. This season felt like the first season all over again, with smaller, more personal stakes, but this time, surrounded in political intrigue and metacontext. Some might call this more "boring" than previous seasons, but this was one of the most frightening seasons of all for me, because the threat felt extremely plausible. Nukes and bioweapons don't just get thrown around every day in the United States like 24 seems to depict, but foreign relations and signing treaties do happen from time to time. What makes this season so heartbreaking is that our protagonists fail. When the peace treaty fails to go through at the end of the season, that means Hassan's life goal never went through. That the people of his country would all be left in political turmoil which, in some ways, is more dangerous than an instant, terrorist threat. While this season never directly shows those implications (because President Taylor's decision to not go through with it happens in the last episode), the consequences can be inferred. For a huge history and government nerd like me, this was definitely the most interesting conflict that the series has ever tackled. There are the people who love villains like Habib Marwan (mostly normal people), and then there's me, who finds the consequences of not signing a peace treaty to be the most threatening presence of the show. That's one reason Day 8 is my favorite: the semi-realistic political scheme and the overarching conflict of the season.
The other reason I love this season is that it feels the most personal of any season, as I hinted at earlier. More than any season before it, we just get to see characters we love interacting with one another. The family life of President Hassan and his diplomatic relationship with President Taylor is awesome. On top of that, seeing Renee and Jack in this season interacting is fantastic and all the more heartbreaking when she dies mid-way through the season. Renee's death is absolutely heartbreaking, and Jack's killing spree he goes on out of revenge is one of the most epic, satisfying, and grotesque moments of the entire show. The worst part is they are literally about to have their happy ending together, too! But, honestly, as much as I love Renee, I think I liked it better this way, as it continued to show the theme that, in the anti-terrorist business, you never get your happy ending.
Another crazy part about this season is that the assassination attempt on IRK President Hassan is successful. His brother and people associated with him who believed him to be too weak and willing to accept peace murdered him in cold blood on screen. Our heroes failed, just like they would later fail to sign the peace treaty. After he passes, his wife takes over the presidency, which is an interesting plotline as it seems there's not really a system to how people are supposed to take over in the IRK, but her people love her, so I guess that was good enough.
Season 1 may have the most simple and digestible plot. Season 2 may have the most emotional climax and the over-the-top political drama. Season 3 may have the quintessential character cast and the most relatability after the COVID-19 pandemic. Season 4 may have the endless action sequences. Season 5 may have the most engaging and fast-paced plot. Season 6 may do the best job at raising moral questions for the viewer for them to ponder. Season 7 may have the most interesting shift in setting, going from CTU to FBI, and the most metacontext due to Redemption. Season 9 may have some incredible moments that make it an impeccable finale...
But Season 8 is my favorite season of 24 due to its incredible raw, emotional storytelling and realistically-terrifying political drama. Though very few people agree with me, I stand firm in saying this is not a mediocre season of 24, but a masterpiece of a season of 24. It is my favorite season of my favorite TV show.
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The Verdict:
The Reel Ranking:
10: Day 4 - 49%
9: Day 10 (Legacy) - 53%
8: Day 1 - 77%
7: Day 3 - 84%
6: Day 6 - 85%
5: Day 7 - 88%
4: Day 9 (Live Another Day) - 94%
3: Day 5 - 96%
2: Day 2 - 97%
1: Day 8 - 98%
Common Critic Consensus:
10: Day 10 (Legacy) - 55%
9: Day 8 - 71%
8: Day 7 - 74%
7: Day 9 (Live Another Day) - 76%
6: Day 6 - 77%
5: Day 3 - 83%
4: Day 4 - 87%
3: Day 2 - 89%
2: Day 1 - 92%
1: Day 5 - 95%
Common Audience Consensus:
10: Day 10 (Legacy) - 52%
9: Day 6 - 75%
8: Day 8 - 82%
7: Day 7 - 84%
6: Day 9 (Live Another Day) - 87%
5: Day 3 - 88%
4: Day 2 - 89%
3: Day 4 - 90%
2: Day 1 - 91%
1: Day 5 - 92%